delivered the opinion of the court:
This intеrlocutory appeal is brought pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 307(a)(1) (188 Ill. 2d R. 307(a)(1)) and involves the propriety of enforcing an injunctive order in the context of a dissolution of marriage proceeding filed by petitioner, Mariamma T. Ignatius, against respondent, Tharayil O. Ignatius. Respondent appeals from the trial court’s orders entered following the death of petitioner and the dismissal of the cause of action. We affirm in part and vacate in part.
At the outset, we note that respondent’s counsel has violated Supreme Court Rule 342(a) (155 Ill. 2d R. 342(a)) by failing to include a copy of the notice of appeal with the appendix to his appellate brief. Where an appellant’s brief fails to comply with supreme court rules, this court has inherent authority to dismiss the appeаl for noncompliance. Kuzmanich v. Cobb,
Petitioner and respondent were married in January 1961, and two children were born of the marriage, both now adults. In February 2001 petitioner filed a petition seeking a dissolution of marriage from respondent. During the course of the dissolution proceeding, the trial court enjoined the parties from transferring or otherwise disposing of the marital assets, including the marital residence, two apartment buildings, personal property in the marital residence, and other property contained in a safe deposit box.
Following a hearing on May 1, 2002, the trial court granted a motion brought by petitioner to modify the injunctive order. At the time of the hearing, petitioner had been diagnosed with bone cancer and was about to undergo medical treatment. Petitioner sought to modify the injunction for estate planning purposes. Petitioner requested permission to sever the joint ownership of marital assets sо that she could plan the disposition of her assets without alienating them from the marital estate. With this modification, petitioner asked the trial court to continue the injunctive order in full force and effect. The trial court modified the injunctive order to the extent that it ordered ££[a]ll assets jointly held by the parties shall be transferred into tenancy in common interests as soon as practicаble.”
On July 20, 2002, petitioner died. Shortly thereafter, respondent moved the trial court to dismiss petitioner’s petition for dissolution of marriage. The record reflects no judgment of dissolution had been entered. In September 2002 Susan Ignatius (intervenor), as executor and trustee of petitioner’s estate and declaration of trust, requested leave to intervene in the proceedings, which the trial court granted. In her petition to intervene, intervenor requested that the trial court enforce the terms of the preliminary injunction as modified by the May 1, 2002, order. In her prayer for relief, intervenor requested the trial court to perform an accounting of the property and divide the joint marital property in accordance with the terms of the May 1, 2002, order.
On December 5, 2002, the trial court entеred a memorandum opinion and order. It found that petitioner died without having completed the transfer of all jointly held marital assets. Relying on New York Life Insurance Co. v. Sogol,
On December 13, 2002, respondent filed a motion for clarification, requesting that the trial court clarify the time frame in which the accounting was to occur. Respondent also asked the trial court to resolve the issues raised in his previously filed motion to dismiss, in which he sought the dismissal of the dissolution petition and the dissolution of the prior injunctive orders as a result of petitioner’s death and the abatement of the dissolution proceeding.
On January 10, 2003, the trial court entered its memorandum opinion and order. The trial court granted respondent’s motion to dismiss petitioner’s dissolution petition but denied respоndent’s request to dissolve the prior injunctive orders. The trial court explained that the injunctive orders survived the abatement of the dissolution proceedings. It further ordered the accounting to commence immediately. Respondent filed a timely notice of interlocutory appeal pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 307(a)(1) (188 Ill 2d R. 307(a)(1)), challenging the trial court’s authority to continue the injunction and order an accounting and a division of assets following the dismissal of the cause of action.
Before reaching the merits of the appeal, we must first address intervenor’s claim that respondent has waived appellate review of the trial court’s May 1, 2002, injunctive order. Intervenor asserts that, in his response to intervenor’s petition for intervention, respondent requested the injunctive оrder entered only in 2001 be dissolved and, therefore, he should be barred from seeking review of the May 2002 injunctive order. Intervenor also claims that the trial court’s orders of December 5, 2002, and January 10, 2003, are separate and distinct and, as such, respondent should be allowed to challenge only the January 10, 2003, order.
In Sarah Bush Lincoln Health Center v. Berlin,
In the present case, the May 1, 2002, injunctive order was a modification of a prior injunctive order and was predicated on an injunctive order entered in February 2001. Had the trial court granted respondent’s motion and dissolved the injunctive order entered in 2001, the modification order entered on May 1, 2002, would certainly havе been affected as well. Accordingly, the scope of our jurisdiction to review the trial court’s rulings is not limited to the orders entered only in 2001, despite respondent’s failure to specify the other ruling in his notice of appeal, because they are all steps in the procedural progression leading to the specified judgment on appeal. See Berlin, 268 111. App. 3d at 187.
Turning to the merits, respondent contends that the trial court erred when it entered the December 5, 2002, and the January 10, 2003, orders denying his motion to dissolve the prior injunctive orders, continuing the injunction, and ordering an accounting. According to respondent, the injunctions should have been dissolved because the trial court dismissed the cause of action following the death of petitioner. Respondent also cоntends that the trial court erred when it ordered an accounting and a division of the parties’ assets because this, too, was subsequent to the dismissal of the underlying cause of action.
Intervenor counters that an injunction survives abatement of the dissolution proceedings, citing New York Life,
Generally, in an interlocutory appeal brought pursuant to Rule 307(a)(1), the only question before this court is whether a sufficient showing was made to the trial court to sustain its order granting, denying, or modifying the interlocutory relief. Keefe-Shea Joint Venture, Inc. v. City of Evanston,
Respondent is not appealing the entry of earlier injunсtive orders. Rather, the parties have directed their arguments to the questions concerning the continuing viability of the injunctive order and the trial court’s authority to enforce the injunctive order and to order an accounting and a division of property following the dismissal of the petition for dissolution. Because these are legal questions, our review is de novo. See Hamlin,
Section 401(b) of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (the Marriage Act) (750 ILCS 5/401(b) (West 2000)) provides in relevant part:
“Judgment shall not be entered unless, to the extent it has jurisdiction to do so, the court has considered, approved, reserved or made provision for *** the maintenance of either spouse and the disposition of property. The court may enter a judgment for dissolution that reserves any of these issues either upon (i) agreement of the parties, or (ii) motion of either party and a finding by the court that appropriate circumstances exist.
The death of a party subsequent to entry of a judgment for dissolution but before judgment on reserved issues shall not abate the proceedings.” 750 ILCS 5/401(b) (West 2000).
The Marriage Act is a statutory enactment from our legislature. Accordingly, a trial court’s authority tо act in dissolution proceedings is conferred only by statute. In re Marriage of Rhodes,
In Brandon v. Caisse,
In the present case, there is no indication in the record that the trial court entered a judgment of dissolution of the marriage prior to petitioner’s death. A trial court’s judgment of dissolution is essential to preclude abatement of the proceedings. See 750 ILCS 5/401(b) (West 2000); Black,
This case is unlike Copeland v. McLean,
In the present case, intervenor was essentially asking the trial court to carry on with the wishes of petitioner and divide the marital property as if petitioner had survived. The Marriage Act contains no provision authorizing the trial court to act in this manner without the prior entry of a judgment of dissolution. Because petitioner died and because no judgment for dissolution had been entered, the dissolution proceeding abated. Marital property cannot be divided in a proceeding that no longer exists. See Black,
The trial court properly granted respondent’s motion to dismiss petitioner’s petition for dissolution because the cause of action had abated upon the death of petitioner and no judgment of dissolution had been entered. We therefore affirm that pоrtion of the judgment. However, we vacate the trial court’s orders calling for an accounting and a division of the property in accordance with the May 1, 2002, order.
Having said that, we need to address the effect of our ruling vis-avis the May 1, 2002, modification of the injunctive order. Relying on New York Life, intervenor asserts that an injunction survives abatement of the dissolution proceedings and that the trial court should have retained jurisdiction to enforce the injunction. Respondent argues that injunctions are terminated on the dismissal of a cause of action, citing section 501(d)(3) of the Marriage Act (750 ILCS 5/501(d)(3) (West 2000)).
In New York Life,
The trial court awarded the proceeds to Sogol, and the reviewing court reversed. The reviewing court noted that, under section 501(d)(3) of the Marriage Act (750 ILCS 5/501(d)(3) (West 1998)), the preliminary injunction against Bruce did not terminate until his death. The reviewing court further notеd that, until his death, Bruce did not have the power or the authority to change the beneficiary of the policies because the preliminary injunction was still in effect. It held that, while Bruce’s death abated the dissolution of marriage action, it did not abate the preliminary injunction. New York Life,
To reconcile the rationale and holding in New York Life with the circumstances of the present cаse, we must look to the context in which the proceedings were brought. The New York Life action was not brought or litigated as part of the dissolution action following the death of Bruce. Rather, it was an independent suit to enforce the terms of the preliminary injunction entered during the course of the dissolution proceedings. This is a critical distinction. In the present case, intervenor sought within the сontext of the dissolution proceeding to protect petitioner’s ownership interest in the marital property accumulated during the parties’ nearly 40-year marriage but not transferred into tenancy in common before her death. However, because the trial court had not entered a judgment of dissolution, the dissolution proceeding abated following petitioner’s death, and thе trial cotut lost its jurisdiction to decide the property issue.
Our decision not to allow intervenor to proceed with her litigation in the context of the dissolution proceeding is supported by a review of two other cases. In Koenings v. First National Bank & Trust,
Moreover, section 501(d)(3) of the Marriage Act provides that temporary orders terminate “when the final judgment is entered or when the petition for dissolution of marriage *** is dismissed.” 750 ILCS 5/501(d) (3) (West 2000). Therefore, in the cоntext of the instant dissolution proceeding, the injunctive orders terminated when the trial court granted respondent’s motion to dismiss petitioner’s petition for dissolution.
In so holding, we do not imply that intervenor may not seek alternative avenues to accommodate the wishes of petitioner. In her capacity as executor of petitioner’s estate, intervenor may have a cаuse of action for injunctive relief outside of the Marriage Act, such as an independent suit for an injunction. See 735 ILCS 5/11 — 101 et seq. (West 2000). Additionally, although the dissolution action abated, it is possible that the issue of respondent’s alleged violation of the preliminary injunction remains viable for resolution in a probate action.
Section 16 — 1 of the Probate Act of 1975 (the Probate Act) (755 ILCS 5/16 — 1 (West 2000)) allows a рarty to file a citation on behalf of the estate to recover property and discover information. A trial court, in such proceedings, is authorized to determine all questions of title, claims of adverse title, and right of property and may enter such orders and judgments as the case may require. In re Estate of Denier,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the circuit court of Du Page County dismissing the cause of action but vacate the orders calling for an accounting and a division of the marital property.
Affirmed in part and vacated in part.
BOWMAN and GILLERAN JOHNSON, JJ, concur.
